fbpx
Wikipedia

Bazar de la Charité

The Bazar de la Charité was an annual charity event orchestrated by the French Catholic aristocracy in Paris beginning in 1885, when it was first organised by Englishman Henry Blount, the son of banker Sir Edward Blount, a financier of railway enterprises in France. The Bazar was held in a variety of locations by a consortium of charitable organisations that shared renting fees, acting to reduce costs and group potential buyers.

The 1897 Bazar de la Charité became known for the fire which claimed 126 lives, many of which were notable aristocratic women, including Sophie Charlotte, Duchess of Alençon.

Fire of 1897

 
Interior, before the fire
 
After the fire

In 1897, the Bazar was located in the 8th arrondissement of Paris at 17 Rue Jean-Goujon, inside a large wooden warehouse which the organisers had reconstituted as a medieval street using painted wood, cardboard, cloth, and papier-mache. One of the key attractions of the Bazar, scheduled for 3 to 6 May, was to be a cinematograph installation which functioned with ether lamps.

On the afternoon of 4 May, the projectionist's equipment caught fire,[1] and 126 people—mostly aristocratic women—died as a result of the following blaze and the panic of the crowd in attendance. Over 200 others sustained additional injuries,[2] and the disaster—noted for improperly marked exits[2][3]—was reported internationally.

Some of the visitors fleeing through the courtyard were aided in escaping through the windows of the adjacent Hôtel du Palais' kitchen by the hotel's manager, Mme Roche-Sautier, and cook M Gauméry.[4] The condition of the charred remains of the victims was such that dental records were necessary for identification, which in itself became a landmark in the early history of forensic dentistry.[5]

In the aftermath of the fire, 937,438 francs, equivalent to the amount raised by the previous year's Bazar, was donated by an anonymous benefactor to the charitable purposes for which the Bazar de la Charité had been organised.[6]

Notre-Dame-de-Consolation

 
Notre-Dame de Consolation, Paris

A Catholic chapel, the Notre-Dame-de-Consolation, was built on the location of the Bazar in honour of the victims of the fire, and is currently owned by the Bazar de la Charité Memorial association. It was classed as a historic monument in 1982, and in 2013 was devolved to the Society of Saint Pius X.

Victims of the fire

 
A contemporary report of the fire
 
A Romanian newspaper published pictures of some of those killed

The following individuals were numbered among the 126 victims of the fire.

  • Sophie Charlotte of Bavaria, Duchess of Alençon (1847–1897). A leading patron of the bazaar, she had insisted on remaining until all those working under her had been rescued. Her body was unrecognisable, even to her personal maid, but was identified by her dentist on the basis of her gold fillings.[7]
  • Claire Beucher de Saint Ange (1829–1897), sister of Laure Beucher (below). The two were visitors to the bazaar.[8] Her body was burned beyond recognition, but she was initially identified by her maid on the basis of her red flannels, and the identification was later confirmed by her husband, General Eugène Chevals, from a scar on her breast.[9]
  • Laure Beucher de Saint Ange (1827–1897), sister of Claire Beucher (above). The two were visitors to the bazaar.[10] The baroness of Saint Ange's body was burned beyond recognition but was identified by her maid on the basis of three rings she had been wearing.[11]
  • Elise Blonska (1835–1897). A Russian immigrant who was librarian to Jules Claretie, she had been working a stall raising money for the blind. Her body, burned beyond recognition, was identified by her orthopaedic corset.[12] She was buried in the Montparnasse Cemetery on 13 May.[13]
  • Dona Adélaïda Corradi y Anduga, Madame Florez (1847–1897), died of her injuries in Beaujon Hospital.[14]
  • Claire Dalloyau (1838–1897), wife of Auguste Bouvyer, was a member of the Third Order of Saint Dominic.[15] She and her daughter were working at the duchess of Alençon's stall. The daughter suffered serious burns but survived. Mrs Bouvyer's body was entirely consumed by the fire, with no part recovered, requiring a court order to pronounce her dead.[16]
  • Lucie Dehondt (1871–1897), in religion Sr Vincent of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul, was present with Sr Marie Ginoux and Valérie Verhasselt (both below) to raise money for the orphans of Le Raincy.[17]
  • Thérèse Donon (1857–1897), baroness Saint-Didier, attended the bazaar to assist her husband's aunt, the dowager baroness Saint-Didier (Louise Pedra, below). After being rescued she re-entered the building thinking her niece, Mademoiselle Kergorlay, was still inside.[18]
  • Marie du Quesne (1857–1897), Viscountess Bonneval, whose husband had been a member of the Chamber of Deputies of the Third French Republic from 1885 to 1889. She was helping at one of the stalls in the bazaar. After escaping the fire she had re-entered the building to try to help a friend. Her body was identified by her husband on the basis of her jewellery. Her 15-year-old daughter fell ill and died nine days later.[19] Both were buried in the family vault in Issoudun.[20]
  • Dr Henri Feulard (1858–1897), visited the bazaar together with his wife, their ten-year-old daughter Germaine (above), and the family maid Ernestine Moreau (below). The family became separated in the stampede. Dr Feulard re-entered the building in an attempt to save his daughter, but both perished, as did Ernestine Moreau. Mrs Feulard suffered critical burn injuries,[21] but survived.[22]
  • Juilie Garivet (1853–1897), in religion Sr Marie-Madeleine of the Blind Sisters of St Paul.
  • Anna Ginoux de Fermon (1863–1897), in religion Sr Marie of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul, was the superior of her order's house in Le Raincy. She was present with Sr Vincent Dehondt (above) and Valérie Verhasselt (below) to raise money for the orphans of Le Raincy.[23] Her remains were transported to Brittany for burial in the family vault. Her funeral mass was attended by thousands, including the Daughters of Charity of Nantes and 25 priests from the neighbourhood.[24]
  • Blanche Grossier, (1852–1897), wife of the industrialist Achille Chouippe, who employed upwards of 300 workers. She kept the company accounts and took care to do right by her husband's employees. She had visited the bazaar as a customer. Her body was identified from her clothes.[25]
  • Léonie Guillaumet (1868–1897), a young woman attached to the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul of Saint-Louis-en-l'Isle, accompanied Sr Joseph Sabatier (below) to assist with her efforts.[26]
  • Amélie Guyard-Delalain, (1829–1897), wife of Alfred Carteron and mother of Jeanne Carteron (above). She was at the bazaar to help with a stall to support the charitable works of the parish of Saint-Roch, Paris.[27]
  • Hélène de Haber, Comtesse de Horn (1831–1897), died of her injuries in Beaujon Hospital.[28]
  • Marie Hoskier (1858–1897), was the daughter of Emile Hoskier, the Danish consul general in Paris, and of Elise Weyer (below), and the wife of Eugène Roland-Gosselin, who belonged to a leading family of Parisian stockbrokers. A Protestant convert to Catholicism, she was very active in charitable projects.[29] Her mother also died in the fire.
  • Emma Jaume (1830–1897), wife of General Warnet, her second husband. She had previously been widowed as Madame de Terrasse, and visited the bazaar because her daughter by her first marriage was running a stall to benefit the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul of Clichy.[30] She was buried with her parents in the Cimetière Saint-Martin, Perpignan.[31]
  • Jeanne de Kergorlay (1849–1897), wife of Jean Guy de Poilloüe, count Saint-Périer, and mother of (among others) René de Saint-Périer. A large woman, she remained inside the building giving a leg-up to others escaping through a high window (including her niece, Mademoiselle Kergorlay) until the floor gave way.[32] Her body was identified by her children's governess on the basis of her jewellery, and the identification confirmed by her father.[33]
  • Eugénie Marlé (1853–1897), wife of Louis Chapuis, a businessman in the Bercy neighbourhood, active in the charitable works of the parish of Saint Roch. Her body was burnt beyond recognition but was identified due to a bracelet.[34]
  • Christianne Meilhac (1882–1897), aged 15, visited the bazaar together with her grandfather, Victor Poidevin (below), and an old friend of his, Dr Ernest Rochet (below). After calling at the stall where Mrs Rochet was assisting Viscountess Malézieu (above), the three took a turn around the building to admire the decorations. They were at the furthest point from the exit when the fire started.[35] Ms Meilhac's body was not identified for several days, until after her grandfather's funeral had already taken place.[36]
  • Laura Meinell, Viscountess d'Avenel (1855–1897). The wife of the economic historian Viscount Georges d'Avenel, Viscountess d'Avenel kept a salon noted for the attendance of leading figures in literature, the arts and diplomacy. On returning home from the catastrophe she did not seem seriously hurt, but she later died of internal injuries.[37] She was buried in the Père Lachaise Cemetery.[38]
  • Ernestine Moreau (1862–1897). Maid to the Feulard family (above), she was buried in Montmartre Cemetery.[39]
  • Louiza Francesca Pedra (1816–1897), dowager baroness of Saint-Didier. Born in London to Portuguese parents, and growing up in England, in 1836 she married Baron Armand-Aimé de Saint-Didier, a magistrate who would go on to become a director of the Compagnie des chemins de fer du Nord. As a widow she divided her time between socialising and charity work.[40]
  • Pénélope Petrocochino (1836–1897), Widow of Antoine Vlasto, died of her injuries three days after the incident.[41]
  • Victor Poidevin (1825–1897), visited the bazaar together with his granddaughter, Christiane Meilhac (above), and an old friend, Dr Ernest Rochet (below). After calling at the stall where Mrs Rochet was assisting Viscountess Malézieu (above), the three took a turn around the building to admire the decorations. They were at the furthest point from the exit when the fire started.[42]
  • Aline Ramboug, Madame Anatole Le Brun de Sesseval (1826–1897), was rescued from the fire by her 15-year-old granddaughter, Mademoiselle de Froissard, who re-entered the building to save her, but she died of her injuries four days later.[43]
  • Marguerite Rémond (1835–1897), in religion Sr Sainte Claire of the Blind Sisters of St Paul.
  • Dr Ernest Rochet (1830–1897), visited the bazaar together with a friend, Mr Poidevin (above) and his granddaughter, Christiane Meilhac (above). After calling at the stall where Mrs Rochet was helping Viscountess Malézieu (above), the three took a turn around the building to admire the decorations. They were at the furthest point from the exit when the fire started. Dr Rochet was identified by scraps of clothing burnt to his body.[44]
  • Adèle Sabatier (1830–1897), in religion Sr Joseph of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul, was one of three Daughters of Charity to die in the fire, the only one from the community in Saint-Louis-en-l'Isle.[45]
  • Valérie Verhasselt (1876–1897), aged 20, a boarder at the orphanage run by the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul in Le Raincy, had accompanied Sr Marie Ginoux and Sr Vincent Dehondt (both above) to the bazaar. She was buried in Raincy cemetery.[46]
  • Elise Weyer (1836–1897), wife of Emile Hoskier, the Danish consul general in Paris, died together with her daughter Marie Hoskier (above), wife of the stockbroker Eugène Roland-Gosselin.

In popular culture

  • The event inspired the 1947 film, The Scarlet Bazaar (French: La kermesse rouge).
  • In the German telefilm, A Passionate Princess (German: Sophie – Sissis kleine Schwester), the Duchess Sophie was featured.
  • In the French telefilm, The President's Mistress French: La maîtresse du président, when the President of France Felix Faure worried about the hypothetical presence of his mistress at the scene of the tragedy.
  • In the TF1/Netflix co-production Le Bazar de la Charité (streamed on Netflix under the title "The Bonfire of Destiny"), which premiered in 2019.

References

  1. ^ Richard Abel, The Ciné Goes to Town: French Cinema, 1896–1914 (University of California Press, 1994), p. 17.
  2. ^ a b FireNet International (2010). . web address. Fire Net International. Archived from the original on 11 June 2009. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
  3. ^ Michèle Fontana, "Faits divers et politique: l'incendie du Bazar de la Charité (1897)", in Regards populaires sur la violence, edited by Mireille Piarotas (Publications de l'Université de Saint-Étienne, 2000), pp. 101–107.
  4. ^ Geoffrey Cubitt, "Martyrs of Charity, Heroes of Solidarity: Catholic and Republican Responses to the Fire at the Bazar de la Charité, Paris, 1897", French History 21/3 (2007), pp. 331–352.
  5. ^ Mary Blume, "Remembering a Belle Époque inferno in Paris", New York Times, April 28, 2008.
  6. ^ Annales de la Congrégation de la Mission (Lazaristes) et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charité (Paris, 1897), p. 369.
  7. ^ L'Avenir, May 7, 1897.
  8. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 67.
  9. ^ L'Avenir, May 7, 1897.
  10. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 67.
  11. ^ L'Avenir, May 7, 1897.
  12. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 29.
  13. ^ "L'enterrement de Mlle de Blonska", L'Express du Midi, 14 May 1897
  14. ^ "Récapitulation des victimes", Le Petit Parisien, May 8, 1897.
  15. ^ L'Année Dominicaine (1897), p. 249.
  16. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), pp. 44–35.
  17. ^ Annales de la Congrégation de la Mission (Lazaristes) et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charité (Paris, 1897), p. 362.
  18. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 247.
  19. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), pp. 30–35.
  20. ^ "La mort tragique de la vicomtesse de Bonneval" [The tragic death of the Vicomtesse de Bonneval]. La Nouvelle République (in French). 3 August 2012.
  21. ^ "Récapitulation des victimes", Le Petit Parisien, May 8, 1897.
  22. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 329.
  23. ^ Annales de la Congrégation de la Mission (Lazaristes) et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charité (Paris, 1897), pp. 362, 365.
  24. ^ Annales de la Congrégation de la Mission (Lazaristes) et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charité (Paris, 1898), pp. 340–342.
  25. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), pp. 68–71.
  26. ^ Annales de la Congrégation de la Mission (Lazaristes) et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charité (Paris, 1897), p. 362.
  27. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 61.
  28. ^ "Récapitulation des victimes", Le Petit Parisien, May 8, 1897.
  29. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 243.
  30. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 306.
  31. ^ [WARNET Charles, major general (1828-1913)]. Friends of Père Lachaise cemetery (in French). 16 February 2007. Archived from the original on 23 March 2016.
  32. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), pp. 248–249.
  33. ^ L'Avenir, May 7, 1897.
  34. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 64.
  35. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), pp. 20–21.
  36. ^ "Reconnaissance du cadavre de Mlle Meilhac", Le Petit Parisien, May 9, 1897.
  37. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), p. 18.
  38. ^ "Les obsèques particulières", Le Matin, 9 May 1897
  39. ^ "Les obsèques particulières", Le Matin, 9 May 1897
  40. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), pp. 247–248.
  41. ^ "Deux nouveaux décès", Le Petit Parisien, May 9, 1897.
  42. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), pp. 20–21.
  43. ^ "Deux nouveaux décès", Le Petit Parisien, May 9, 1897.
  44. ^ Comtesse D. de Beaurepaire de Louvagny, Les Martyrs de la charité (Paris, 1897), pp. 20–21.
  45. ^ Annales de la Congrégation de la Mission (Lazaristes) et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charité (Paris, 1897), p. 362.
  46. ^ "Au Raincy", Le Petit Parisien, May 9, 1897.
  • Marguerite Bourcet, Le Duc et la Duchesse d'Alençon: un couple de tragédie, 393 pages, Perrin, 1939 (2003 reprint, ISBN 2-262-02069-8)
  • Dominique Paoli, Il y a cent ans: l'incendie du Bazar de la Charité, Paris, MDC, 1997.
  • Venita Datta, Heroes and Legends of Fin-de-Siècle France, Cambridge University Press, 2011, pp. 33–75.

Further reading

  • Charmetant, Félix (1897). Livre D'Or des Martyrs de la Charité. Hommage aux Victimes de la Catastrophe du 4 mai 1897, Paris [Golden book of the martyrs of charity: tribute to the victims of the disaster of May 4, 1897, Paris] (in French). Bureau des œuvres d'Orient.

External links

  • The projection at the Bazar de la Charité (French)
  • Liste des victimes et des parents des victimes de l'incendie du Bazar de la Charité de A à G
  • Liste des victimes et des parents des victimes de l'incendie du Bazar de la Charité de H à P
  • Liste des victimes et des parents des victimes de l'incendie du Bazar de la Charité de Q à Z

bazar, charité, this, article, about, 1897, fire, paris, french, television, series, around, fire, annual, charity, event, orchestrated, french, catholic, aristocracy, paris, beginning, 1885, when, first, organised, englishman, henry, blount, banker, edward, b. This article is about the 1897 fire in Paris For the French television series set around the fire see Le Bazar de la Charite The Bazar de la Charite was an annual charity event orchestrated by the French Catholic aristocracy in Paris beginning in 1885 when it was first organised by Englishman Henry Blount the son of banker Sir Edward Blount a financier of railway enterprises in France The Bazar was held in a variety of locations by a consortium of charitable organisations that shared renting fees acting to reduce costs and group potential buyers The Duchess of Alencon nee Duchess Sophie in Bavaria photograph taken in 1895 The 1897 Bazar de la Charite became known for the fire which claimed 126 lives many of which were notable aristocratic women including Sophie Charlotte Duchess of Alencon Contents 1 Fire of 1897 2 Notre Dame de Consolation 3 Victims of the fire 4 In popular culture 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksFire of 1897 Edit Interior before the fire After the fire In 1897 the Bazar was located in the 8th arrondissement of Paris at 17 Rue Jean Goujon inside a large wooden warehouse which the organisers had reconstituted as a medieval street using painted wood cardboard cloth and papier mache One of the key attractions of the Bazar scheduled for 3 to 6 May was to be a cinematograph installation which functioned with ether lamps On the afternoon of 4 May the projectionist s equipment caught fire 1 and 126 people mostly aristocratic women died as a result of the following blaze and the panic of the crowd in attendance Over 200 others sustained additional injuries 2 and the disaster noted for improperly marked exits 2 3 was reported internationally Some of the visitors fleeing through the courtyard were aided in escaping through the windows of the adjacent Hotel du Palais kitchen by the hotel s manager Mme Roche Sautier and cook M Gaumery 4 The condition of the charred remains of the victims was such that dental records were necessary for identification which in itself became a landmark in the early history of forensic dentistry 5 In the aftermath of the fire 937 438 francs equivalent to the amount raised by the previous year s Bazar was donated by an anonymous benefactor to the charitable purposes for which the Bazar de la Charite had been organised 6 Notre Dame de Consolation Edit Notre Dame de Consolation Paris A Catholic chapel the Notre Dame de Consolation was built on the location of the Bazar in honour of the victims of the fire and is currently owned by the Bazar de la Charite Memorial association It was classed as a historic monument in 1982 and in 2013 was devolved to the Society of Saint Pius X Victims of the fire Edit A contemporary report of the fire A Romanian newspaper published pictures of some of those killed The following individuals were numbered among the 126 victims of the fire Sophie Charlotte of Bavaria Duchess of Alencon 1847 1897 A leading patron of the bazaar she had insisted on remaining until all those working under her had been rescued Her body was unrecognisable even to her personal maid but was identified by her dentist on the basis of her gold fillings 7 Claire Beucher de Saint Ange 1829 1897 sister of Laure Beucher below The two were visitors to the bazaar 8 Her body was burned beyond recognition but she was initially identified by her maid on the basis of her red flannels and the identification was later confirmed by her husband General Eugene Chevals from a scar on her breast 9 Laure Beucher de Saint Ange 1827 1897 sister of Claire Beucher above The two were visitors to the bazaar 10 The baroness of Saint Ange s body was burned beyond recognition but was identified by her maid on the basis of three rings she had been wearing 11 Elise Blonska 1835 1897 A Russian immigrant who was librarian to Jules Claretie she had been working a stall raising money for the blind Her body burned beyond recognition was identified by her orthopaedic corset 12 She was buried in the Montparnasse Cemetery on 13 May 13 Dona Adelaida Corradi y Anduga Madame Florez 1847 1897 died of her injuries in Beaujon Hospital 14 Claire Dalloyau 1838 1897 wife of Auguste Bouvyer was a member of the Third Order of Saint Dominic 15 She and her daughter were working at the duchess of Alencon s stall The daughter suffered serious burns but survived Mrs Bouvyer s body was entirely consumed by the fire with no part recovered requiring a court order to pronounce her dead 16 Lucie Dehondt 1871 1897 in religion Sr Vincent of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul was present with Sr Marie Ginoux and Valerie Verhasselt both below to raise money for the orphans of Le Raincy 17 Therese Donon 1857 1897 baroness Saint Didier attended the bazaar to assist her husband s aunt the dowager baroness Saint Didier Louise Pedra below After being rescued she re entered the building thinking her niece Mademoiselle Kergorlay was still inside 18 Marie du Quesne 1857 1897 Viscountess Bonneval whose husband had been a member of the Chamber of Deputies of the Third French Republic from 1885 to 1889 She was helping at one of the stalls in the bazaar After escaping the fire she had re entered the building to try to help a friend Her body was identified by her husband on the basis of her jewellery Her 15 year old daughter fell ill and died nine days later 19 Both were buried in the family vault in Issoudun 20 Dr Henri Feulard 1858 1897 visited the bazaar together with his wife their ten year old daughter Germaine above and the family maid Ernestine Moreau below The family became separated in the stampede Dr Feulard re entered the building in an attempt to save his daughter but both perished as did Ernestine Moreau Mrs Feulard suffered critical burn injuries 21 but survived 22 Juilie Garivet 1853 1897 in religion Sr Marie Madeleine of the Blind Sisters of St Paul Anna Ginoux de Fermon 1863 1897 in religion Sr Marie of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul was the superior of her order s house in Le Raincy She was present with Sr Vincent Dehondt above and Valerie Verhasselt below to raise money for the orphans of Le Raincy 23 Her remains were transported to Brittany for burial in the family vault Her funeral mass was attended by thousands including the Daughters of Charity of Nantes and 25 priests from the neighbourhood 24 Blanche Grossier 1852 1897 wife of the industrialist Achille Chouippe who employed upwards of 300 workers She kept the company accounts and took care to do right by her husband s employees She had visited the bazaar as a customer Her body was identified from her clothes 25 Leonie Guillaumet 1868 1897 a young woman attached to the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul of Saint Louis en l Isle accompanied Sr Joseph Sabatier below to assist with her efforts 26 Amelie Guyard Delalain 1829 1897 wife of Alfred Carteron and mother of Jeanne Carteron above She was at the bazaar to help with a stall to support the charitable works of the parish of Saint Roch Paris 27 Helene de Haber Comtesse de Horn 1831 1897 died of her injuries in Beaujon Hospital 28 Marie Hoskier 1858 1897 was the daughter of Emile Hoskier the Danish consul general in Paris and of Elise Weyer below and the wife of Eugene Roland Gosselin who belonged to a leading family of Parisian stockbrokers A Protestant convert to Catholicism she was very active in charitable projects 29 Her mother also died in the fire Emma Jaume 1830 1897 wife of General Warnet her second husband She had previously been widowed as Madame de Terrasse and visited the bazaar because her daughter by her first marriage was running a stall to benefit the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul of Clichy 30 She was buried with her parents in the Cimetiere Saint Martin Perpignan 31 Jeanne de Kergorlay 1849 1897 wife of Jean Guy de Poilloue count Saint Perier and mother of among others Rene de Saint Perier A large woman she remained inside the building giving a leg up to others escaping through a high window including her niece Mademoiselle Kergorlay until the floor gave way 32 Her body was identified by her children s governess on the basis of her jewellery and the identification confirmed by her father 33 Eugenie Marle 1853 1897 wife of Louis Chapuis a businessman in the Bercy neighbourhood active in the charitable works of the parish of Saint Roch Her body was burnt beyond recognition but was identified due to a bracelet 34 Christianne Meilhac 1882 1897 aged 15 visited the bazaar together with her grandfather Victor Poidevin below and an old friend of his Dr Ernest Rochet below After calling at the stall where Mrs Rochet was assisting Viscountess Malezieu above the three took a turn around the building to admire the decorations They were at the furthest point from the exit when the fire started 35 Ms Meilhac s body was not identified for several days until after her grandfather s funeral had already taken place 36 Laura Meinell Viscountess d Avenel 1855 1897 The wife of the economic historian Viscount Georges d Avenel Viscountess d Avenel kept a salon noted for the attendance of leading figures in literature the arts and diplomacy On returning home from the catastrophe she did not seem seriously hurt but she later died of internal injuries 37 She was buried in the Pere Lachaise Cemetery 38 Ernestine Moreau 1862 1897 Maid to the Feulard family above she was buried in Montmartre Cemetery 39 Louiza Francesca Pedra 1816 1897 dowager baroness of Saint Didier Born in London to Portuguese parents and growing up in England in 1836 she married Baron Armand Aime de Saint Didier a magistrate who would go on to become a director of the Compagnie des chemins de fer du Nord As a widow she divided her time between socialising and charity work 40 Penelope Petrocochino 1836 1897 Widow of Antoine Vlasto died of her injuries three days after the incident 41 Victor Poidevin 1825 1897 visited the bazaar together with his granddaughter Christiane Meilhac above and an old friend Dr Ernest Rochet below After calling at the stall where Mrs Rochet was assisting Viscountess Malezieu above the three took a turn around the building to admire the decorations They were at the furthest point from the exit when the fire started 42 Aline Ramboug Madame Anatole Le Brun de Sesseval 1826 1897 was rescued from the fire by her 15 year old granddaughter Mademoiselle de Froissard who re entered the building to save her but she died of her injuries four days later 43 Marguerite Remond 1835 1897 in religion Sr Sainte Claire of the Blind Sisters of St Paul Dr Ernest Rochet 1830 1897 visited the bazaar together with a friend Mr Poidevin above and his granddaughter Christiane Meilhac above After calling at the stall where Mrs Rochet was helping Viscountess Malezieu above the three took a turn around the building to admire the decorations They were at the furthest point from the exit when the fire started Dr Rochet was identified by scraps of clothing burnt to his body 44 Adele Sabatier 1830 1897 in religion Sr Joseph of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul was one of three Daughters of Charity to die in the fire the only one from the community in Saint Louis en l Isle 45 Valerie Verhasselt 1876 1897 aged 20 a boarder at the orphanage run by the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul in Le Raincy had accompanied Sr Marie Ginoux and Sr Vincent Dehondt both above to the bazaar She was buried in Raincy cemetery 46 Elise Weyer 1836 1897 wife of Emile Hoskier the Danish consul general in Paris died together with her daughter Marie Hoskier above wife of the stockbroker Eugene Roland Gosselin In popular culture EditThe event inspired the 1947 film The Scarlet Bazaar French La kermesse rouge In the German telefilm A Passionate Princess German Sophie Sissis kleine Schwester the Duchess Sophie was featured In the French telefilm The President s Mistress French La maitresse du president when the President of France Felix Faure worried about the hypothetical presence of his mistress at the scene of the tragedy In the TF1 Netflix co production Le Bazar de la Charite streamed on Netflix under the title The Bonfire of Destiny which premiered in 2019 References Edit Richard Abel The Cine Goes to Town French Cinema 1896 1914 University of California Press 1994 p 17 a b FireNet International 2010 History of Fire Safety Legislation and other Interesting Facts web address Fire Net International Archived from the original on 11 June 2009 Retrieved 12 March 2010 Michele Fontana Faits divers et politique l incendie du Bazar de la Charite 1897 in Regards populaires sur la violence edited by Mireille Piarotas Publications de l Universite de Saint Etienne 2000 pp 101 107 Geoffrey Cubitt Martyrs of Charity Heroes of Solidarity Catholic and Republican Responses to the Fire at the Bazar de la Charite Paris 1897 French History 21 3 2007 pp 331 352 Mary Blume Remembering a Belle Epoque inferno in Paris New York Times April 28 2008 Annales de la Congregation de la Mission Lazaristes et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charite Paris 1897 p 369 L Avenir May 7 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 67 L Avenir May 7 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 67 L Avenir May 7 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 29 L enterrement de Mlle de Blonska L Express du Midi 14 May 1897 Recapitulation des victimes Le Petit Parisien May 8 1897 L Annee Dominicaine 1897 p 249 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 pp 44 35 Annales de la Congregation de la Mission Lazaristes et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charite Paris 1897 p 362 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 247 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 pp 30 35 La mort tragique de la vicomtesse de Bonneval The tragic death of the Vicomtesse de Bonneval La Nouvelle Republique in French 3 August 2012 Recapitulation des victimes Le Petit Parisien May 8 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 329 Annales de la Congregation de la Mission Lazaristes et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charite Paris 1897 pp 362 365 Annales de la Congregation de la Mission Lazaristes et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charite Paris 1898 pp 340 342 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 pp 68 71 Annales de la Congregation de la Mission Lazaristes et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charite Paris 1897 p 362 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 61 Recapitulation des victimes Le Petit Parisien May 8 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 243 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 306 WARNET Charles general de division 1828 1913 WARNET Charles major general 1828 1913 Friends of Pere Lachaise cemetery in French 16 February 2007 Archived from the original on 23 March 2016 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 pp 248 249 L Avenir May 7 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 64 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 pp 20 21 Reconnaissance du cadavre de Mlle Meilhac Le Petit Parisien May 9 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 p 18 Les obseques particulieres Le Matin 9 May 1897 Les obseques particulieres Le Matin 9 May 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 pp 247 248 Deux nouveaux deces Le Petit Parisien May 9 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 pp 20 21 Deux nouveaux deces Le Petit Parisien May 9 1897 Comtesse D de Beaurepaire de Louvagny Les Martyrs de la charite Paris 1897 pp 20 21 Annales de la Congregation de la Mission Lazaristes et de la Compagnie des Filles de la Charite Paris 1897 p 362 Au Raincy Le Petit Parisien May 9 1897 Marguerite Bourcet Le Duc et la Duchesse d Alencon un couple de tragedie 393 pages Perrin 1939 2003 reprint ISBN 2 262 02069 8 Dominique Paoli Il y a cent ans l incendie du Bazar de la Charite Paris MDC 1997 Venita Datta Heroes and Legends of Fin de Siecle France Cambridge University Press 2011 pp 33 75 Further reading EditCharmetant Felix 1897 Livre D Or des Martyrs de la Charite Hommage aux Victimes de la Catastrophe du 4 mai 1897 Paris Golden book of the martyrs of charity tribute to the victims of the disaster of May 4 1897 Paris in French Bureau des œuvres d Orient External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bazar de la Charite The projection at the Bazar de la Charite French Liste des victimes et des parents des victimes de l incendie du Bazar de la Charite de A a G Liste des victimes et des parents des victimes de l incendie du Bazar de la Charite de H a P Liste des victimes et des parents des victimes de l incendie du Bazar de la Charite de Q a Z Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bazar de la Charite amp oldid 1134775422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.